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Death toll in Nigeria food queue stampedes rises to 32

Authorities are investigating the incident, and police confirmed the death toll

Death toll in Nigeria food queue stampedes rises to 32

Christmas decorations on a street in Lagos, Nigeria, on December 20, 2024.

AFP

Nigerian police on Sunday raised the total death toll from two stampedes outside centers distributing food to the poor to 32, as the country grappled with a spate of deadly crowd crushes at charity events.

Twenty-two people were killed on Saturday as people queued outside a center distributing rice in the southern town of Okija, police said, after previously warning "many" were dead as a result of the incident.

And on the same day a separate stampede outside a church giving food to the "vulnerable and elderly" in the capital Abuja killed at least 10 people, prompting Nigeria's President Bola Tinubu to clear his schedule in the wake of the twin tragedies.

The stampedes outside food distribution centers come as Africa's most populous country grapples with its worst economic crisis in a generation, with inflation soaring to 34.6 percent in November.

Confirming the toll of 22 dead in Okija, a spokesman for the Anambra state police expressed condolences to the families and friends of those killed.

"The investigation into the unfortunate incident is still ongoing," Anambra police spokesman Tochukwu Ikenga said on Sunday in a statement.

Four children were among the 10 killed in the Abuja stampede outside the Holy Trinity Catholic Church in the Maitama district, police said.

Another eight people were injured in the crush, according to a police spokesperson.

"In a season of joy and celebration, we grieve with fellow citizens mourning the painful losses of their loved ones. Our prayers of divine comfort and healing are with them," said President Tinubu.

A statement from the president's spokesman said Tinubu had "cancelled all his official events in Lagos today... in honor of the stampede victims."

Police pointed to similarities between Saturday's incidents and a stampede at a school funfair in the southwestern city of Ibadan on Thursday.

That crush killed 35 children and gravely injured six others.

"This is a repeat of what happened in Ibadan," Maazo Ezekiel, a spokesman for Nigeria's National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), told AFP on Saturday.

"It is becoming too rampant, and it shows that precautionary measures are not being taken before the distribution of these items," Ezekiel added.

A statement from NEMA's director general called for "proper crowd management during distribution of charity to prevent stampedes and avoidable loss of lives".

"Anytime you are distributing essential materials to people that are eager to partake, and there is no proper crowd control, it often results in situations like this," spokesman Ezekiel added.

Police have already arrested eight people involved in organising the school funfair at Ibadan, according to a spokesman for the force in Oyo State.

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